Listen "Wednesday Real Stories: "Coming Last: Choose again ""
Episode Synopsis
IntroWhat if the beliefs that feel most true about who you are—the "I'm not…" statements you've carried for years—are just choices you made in the past? In this raw Real Wednesday episode, Heather V Masters shares the story of how she transformed a 20-year identity as "not a runner" in just three weeks, from finishing a traumatic 2000 half-marathon alone and wrapped in foil to discovering joy in a 2011 charity 10k. Through visceral storytelling and uncomfortable vulnerability, she reveals how beliefs are choices we can always remake—and why she's still catching those old permission-seeking voices this very morning.What's Inside:The desolate 2000 half-marathon finish: alone, injured, wrapped in foil like a baked potato, vowing never to run againThe 2011 invitation that changed everything: a small charity supporting child-trafficking survivorsThe terrifying Richmond Park moment: realizing she could come last in a tiny race where everyone would noticeHow parental doubt ("Aren't you too old?") planted seeds of limiting beliefsThe visualization that created certainty: seeing herself cross the finish line with people behind herThree weeks of training with a dog who eventually ran home in protestThe friend's voice cutting through the noise at the finish line: healing the 2000 woundRace day revelation: coming third-last was absolutely perfectThis morning's business planning moment: catching dad's voice and choosing againThe NLP anchoring technique: using memorable moments to model future transformationThree Lessons:1. A Belief Is Just a Choice You Made—And You Can Choose AgainReality: That "truth" about yourself might just be a decision you made in a moment of pain twenty years ago. When you recognize it as a choice, not a fact, you reclaim your power to choose differently.2. Big Identity Shifts Don't Require Years—They Require a Moment of CertaintyReality: Transformation doesn't need months of therapy. It needs a single moment of 110% commitment where you decide with absolute certainty who you're becoming. Then the actions follow naturally.3. Old Stories Have Smaller Beliefs Hanging Off Them—Let Them Go TogetherReality: "I'm not a runner" came with "I'm too old," "I'm not a completer," and "I'll embarrass myself." Outgrowing the main story means consciously releasing all the supporting stories too. They don't get to come along for the ride.The Uncomfortable TruthThe stories we tell ourselves about who we are—I'm not creative, I'm terrible with money, I'm just not that kind of person—aren't truths carved in stone. They're choices we made, often years ago, often in moments of pain or failure. And we can choose again. Right now. Today.This Week's Story Rewrite ExerciseRIGHT NOW: Pause and write down three "I can't" statements. The ones you don't say out loud. The ones that feel embarrassing to admit. Those are the ones holding the most power.THEN GO DEEPER: Pick the one holding you back most and ask:When did I first choose to believe this?What was happening when I made this choice?Does it still serve me today?If I could choose again, what would I choose instead?Then visualize yourself living from that new belief with certainty—and take one small action this week that proves the new story is true.Memorable Moments That Will Stick:"Wrapped in foil like a baked potato, utterly desolate""I could come last. Everyone will know.""A blood oath with myself: I would never run again""Even my dog ran home by herself—just had enough""I could hear her voice cutting through all the other noise—'Come on, Heather!'""For the first time in a race, I wasn't alone at the finish...
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